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9 07, 2016

Thinking, feeling, reading (Susan Reynolds, Psychology Today)

By |2016-11-02T11:52:09-04:00July 9th, 2016|2016, Everything Else, Language, Literature, News, poetry, psychology, science|0 Comments

Thinking, feeling, reading: how not just what you read, but how you read, affects your soul and self. From the article: Recent research also revealed that “deep reading”—defined as reading that is slow, immersive, rich in sensory detail and emotional and moral complexity—is distinctive from light reading—little more than the decoding of words. Deep reading [...]

7 07, 2016

Thought, language, and knowledge: does our use of language shape our view of things, and rationality?

By |2016-11-02T11:52:09-04:00July 7th, 2016|2016, Everything Else, July, Language, Literature, Philosophy, poetry, Quotes, Writing|0 Comments

Thought, language, and knowledge: does our use of language shape our view of things, and rationality? What could be more obvious than that people carry over the way they comprehend things through statements onto the structure of things themselves? Yet this opinion, seemingly critical but in reality rash, has first to explain how the carry-over of the [...]

5 07, 2016

Natural empathy and artificial intelligence (Satya Nadella, Slate)

By |2016-07-02T13:42:57-04:00July 5th, 2016|2016, Debate / dialogue, education, Everything Else, Language, News, Philosophy, STEM, Technology, U.S. / Canada|0 Comments

Natural empathy and artificial intelligence: the CEO of Microsoft calls for a greater appreciation of the human condition as computational technology becomes more sophisticated. From the editorial: At a developer conference earlier this year, I shared our approach to A.I. First, we want to build intelligence that augments human abilities and experiences. Ultimately, it’s not going [...]

3 07, 2016

Against Reading

By |2016-11-02T11:52:09-04:00July 3rd, 2016|2016, Academia, Debate / dialogue, education, Everything Else, History, Journalism, July, Observations, Philosophy|0 Comments

Against Reading: why life is better spent doing other things. Ferreus. Hi, Procopius. What are you up to? Procopius. Hello, Ferreus. I’m just catching up on my reading. Ferreus. What magazine is that? Procopius. The Economist. It’s a bit stilted, but it helps me understand world affairs. Ferreus. I looked at it once. It was [...]

2 07, 2016

Liberal arts needed in the tech world (David Kalt, Wall Street Journal)

By |2016-11-02T11:52:10-04:00July 2nd, 2016|2016, education, Employment, Everything Else, July, Language, News, Philosophy, Technology, U.S. / Canada|0 Comments

Liberal arts needed in the tech world: why having a facility for languages, of all sorts, enhances the richness of software development. From the editorial: Most liberal arts degrees encourage a well-rounded curriculum that can give students exposure to programming alongside the humanities. Philosophy, literature, art, history and language give students a thorough understanding of how [...]

29 06, 2016

Egyptian knowledge, health, and piety

By |2016-11-02T11:52:10-04:00June 29th, 2016|2016, Africa, Everything Else, health, June, Literature, Medicine, Quotes, science|0 Comments

Egyptian knowledge, health, and piety: Herodotus, the Greek "Father of History," remarks on Egyptian learning and character. The Egyptians who live in the cultivated parts of the country, by their practice of keeping records of the past, have made themselves the most learned any nation of which I have had experience. I will describe some of [...]

28 06, 2016

Of books to books: Washington Irving on the library of Westminster Abbey

By |2016-11-02T11:52:10-04:00June 28th, 2016|2016, Academia, Debate / dialogue, Europe, Everything Else, June, Language, Libraries, Literature, Philosophy, poetry, Quotes, Technology, U.S. / Canada|0 Comments

Of books to books: Geoffrey Crayon speaks to volumes in the library of Westminster Abbey, and ponders the ways time and technology transform our knowledge. “Language gradually varies, and with it fade away the writings of authors who flourished their allotted time…. Formerly there were some restraints on this excessive multiplication. Works had to be transcribed by [...]

25 06, 2016

4Humanities interviews Humanities Watch

By |2016-11-02T11:52:10-04:00June 25th, 2016|Debate / dialogue, History, HW News, June, Literature, Philosophy|1 Comment

4Humanities interviews Humanities Watch. Ashley Champagne asks about the origins and mission of Humanities Watch, and the humanities' place in society. From the exchange: The point of my website is to demonstrate how the humanities are also in constant conversation with these practical and present interests: science, technology, healthcare, and business. As a matter of fact – [...]

24 06, 2016

AI is coming, and it’s our boon (Brian Fung, Washington Post)

By |2016-09-13T23:05:12-04:00June 24th, 2016|2016, Debate / dialogue, Employment, Everything Else, June, News, STEM, U.S. / Canada|0 Comments

AI is coming, and it's our boon: how working with computers and technology can, in fact, aid the inquiry into ourselves. From the editorial: Making artificial intelligence easy for regular people to use and love depends on a field of research called human-computer interaction, or HCI. And for Ben Shneiderman, a computer science professor at the University of Maryland, [...]

22 06, 2016

Literature, therapy, and healing (Andrew Solomon, The Guardian)

By |2016-11-02T11:52:10-04:00June 22nd, 2016|2016, Academia, Debate / dialogue, Europe, Everything Else, health, History, June, Language, Literature, Medicine, News, science, Writing|0 Comments

How language -- its clarity, immediacy, and nuance -- is vital to both patients and doctors, for it can overcome the split between scientific specialization and the experience of suffering. From the article: Many of the great doctors have been writers, and those who have not have required writers to set down their insights. Hippocrates, Galen, [...]

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